Gathering Kun.quats at the Glen Saint Mary Nurseries 
Announcements 
R. AUBREY FRINK, who has been in the employ of the Glen Saint Mary 
Nurseries for ten years, the last two of which he has been its efficient secre¬ 
tary, has severed his connection with the Nurseries. We desire to bear testi¬ 
mony to his untiring efforts in the interests of the business. 
It is with great pleasure that announcement is hereby made that Prof. H. 
Harold Hume has become associated with the Glen Saint Mary Nurseries, and that from this 
time forward our customers and ourselves will have the benefit of his untiring zeal and recog¬ 
nized talent. 
News of Professor Hume’s return to Florida will be welcome to the fruit-growers of the 
South. From 1899 to 1904 he was horticulturist of the Florida Experiment Station and Pro¬ 
fessor of Horticulture in the University of Florida. Since that time he has been horticulturist 
to the North Carolina Department of Agriculture and Experiment Station. 
As a writer, lecturer and investigator of horticultural problems, Professor Hume has won 
an enviable reputation. During his connection with the Florida Experiment Station, some 
eighteen bulletins were written by him on various subjects. His monograph of citrus fruits, 
published in 1904, is the standard work on orange culture today, and his new work, “The 
Pecan and Its Culture,” is now nearly ready for distribution. 
To the many friends who, during the twenty-four years of its existence, have favored the 
Glen Saint Mary Nurseries with their orders, I feel profoundly grateful. It is their patronage, 
combined with untiring effort on the part of the management, that has enabled these Nurseries 
to attain their present enviable reputation. The advent of Professor Hume will, I am sure, 
bring added prestige, and his past record is suggestive of what may be expected from these 
Nurseries in the future. 
October , 1906 
G. L. TABER 
